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C RANKS AS SECOND LARGEST PRIVATE UNIVERSITY IN U. S.
SSC Forum Speaker Will Urge Alaskan Statehood
tep Vital
0 Safety
1 Nation
Admiral Reeves Says Federal Action Needed For Defense Reasons
call for immediate state-Jod for the territory of laska will be sounded in 133 Junders hall today at 4:15 by Adm. J. W. Reeves U.S. Navy, retired, in a Ilk sponsored by the ASSC Jrum committee.
(There is no longer a ques->n of whether Alaska should
iome a state today or tomorrow,” Imiral Reeves said in an inter-b\v yesterday. “The territory >uld have become a state long
|‘The urgency is greater than ever Russia sits just 45 miles away
—*
PAGE THREE
Goller To Miss Navy Tilt
- PAGE FOUR -
Geologist Visits Bikini
Enrollment
Estimated
At 20.200
Vol. XLII
72
Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Oct. 17, 1950
No. 22
(Courtesy L.A. Times)
J. W. REEVES JR. .
. . . Alaska booster
Im Alaska across the Bering laits,” he continued.
[Any of the arguments put forth It Alaska isn’t ready for state- 1 5d are hogwash.” ll funds for defense installation ! lAdmiral Reeves will point out it Alaska has been a stepchild I the planners in Washington. • C. from borh military and eco-knic standpoints.
statehood would mean more fed-tl funds for defense installtaions such developments as high-1 irs and communications, he said. ! Idmiral Reeves was in charge construction of naval bases in j ska and the Aleutian islands ] ring World War II. Since his liremer.i. he has been general [nager of the Los Angeles De-rtment of Airports.
Other Speakers tarrv Capedo, ASSC forum chair-Jc. said that Reeves is one of prominent, well-qualified speak- | that will be sponsored by the I nun.
ive Hundred xpected for ax Institute
:ax attorneys, accountants, and lc insurance underwriters will Ither at the School of Law to-lorrow for the first meeUng of a kree-day session in the third an-|ial Institute on Federal Taxa-Jn.
f One of the principal speakers in |ie opening program l'- Mark H.
hnson, nationally known author-|y on federal taxation, who will sak on “Dividing an Operating lorporation into Separate Entiles”
Merle. H. Miller, one of the na-|on s leading lax attorneys, will Uk on "Tax Schemes that Failed 1-Where. Wrhen. and Why.” Twenty-four lectures on current ix matters will be given during ie three-day institute
Experimental Theater Opens Run Thursday
A double bill opens the Experimental theater's fifth season at 8:30 p.m. Thursday for a three-day run.
There will be a comedy, “The Man in the Bowler Hat,”- and a tragedy, “Riders of the Sea,” on the group’s first fall program.
Jane Dressier will direct the comedy, an A. A. Milne play.
She has appeared in Pasadena Playhouse and Omaha Community playhouse productions.
Edward Earle plays the male lead ih the farce. Earle not only acts, but writes and conducts musical scores. He starred, wrote and directed the musical score for “Winterset.” He w'rote the musical score of “Antigone,” a last year's Experimental production, and played in it as well.
Barbara Joseph, who plays the female lead, appeared in the Crescent theater production of “Thej Little Foxes.” She played the role ' of Lisa in “Clarissa,” an Experi- i mental theatfcr play, last March.
In the supporting cast are Dee Cooper, Dick Shackleton, Lothor Tuppan, and Dale Wisser.
Freida Callahan directs the other play, John M. Synge's tragedy. The j plot is woven around an Irish family w,ho have lost all but of their men to the sea.
Miss Callahan has appeared in ; summer stock and* on radio shows.
Florence Malin plays the lead.
She has been a comedienne and ' dancer in Navy shows in 1945 and ! has appeared in Pasadena Play- I house productions. She also ap- ! peared in SC's varsity show, “No Love Atoll.”
The supporting cast includes j Elaine Masser, Shirley Ann Powell, 1 dents of the School of Music and Charles Stewart. I )_:____-
Free tickets for the plays may be • . . ^ .
obtained today at the drama office, 1 Al ^ ^ C C I f \ n
3709 South Hoover street, between1 1
9 and 4 p.m. ^ II I A *
Called Again
Stassen Wants I By Wiggins MacArthur for
Bill Kennedy Decides to Vote
No'fornsa To Invade
SC Rooters Prepare
Stanford
(Courtesy L.A. Times) BARBARA BUTTERFIELD . . . solos
Noon Concert Slates Solos
Barbara EuUerfield. soprano, and Gertrude Woods, pianist, will be soloists at the Music at Noon concert Wednesday in Hancock auditorium. Th& program will start at 12:15.
“Rhapsodie Hungrois” No. 6, Liszt, will be Miss Woods' selection, and Miss Butterfield- will sing “Miranda,” Hageman. accompanied by James Low at the piano.
The program will include:
Partita No. 2 in C Minor and Sinfonia. E^h; Six Variations, Op. 24, Beethoven; “Ah. je veux vivre” from "Romeo and Juliet.” Gounod; and "Into the Dark.” Hageman.
Next concert in this weekly series will be presented O^t. 25 and will include original compositions of stu-
Bill Kennedy, LAS president, and member of the Unity party steering committee, will vote against affiliation with the National Students ! Association at the forthcoming Senate meeting. Wednesday night.
Kennedy, representing the largest single body of students at SC, said his decision is a direct result of a vote of the LAS council against i NSA in yesterday’s meeting.
Bill Gumpert, LAS vice-president, moved to stand against NSA. and the council voted 27-21 to uphold the motion.
ln putting the motion on the floor. Gumpert said, “I do not know a lot ahout NSA. but I move that this body go on record as opposed to NSA.” Norm Pakan immediately moved tp table the resolution until the council could “study the problem,” but the motion was ruled out of order.
Cost Is High John Trethaway asked Gumpert why he opposed NSA. and he replied, “the cost is too high for the benefits derived.”
Marie Gordean said, “I think SC can do a lot for NSA. but I do not Uiink NSA can give us enough to compensate for the money.’’ She suggested that the universities on the coast could do more for themselves than NSA could, by just get-i ting together.
Before the vote was taken. Kennedy said. “I am undecided on howto vote on the issue, but this council's vote will be my vote on the Senate.” He said, “I can see many advantages and many disadvan- ! tages.”
Previous to the outburst on NSA, Dori Bonham, former committee j chairman, opened the meeting with ( a report from the committee. She ; outlined the forthcoming "LAS Advisement Week” program for the council. The purpose of the advisement week, November 13-16. is to orientate new and lower division students with their majors.
• i
Two Daily Lectures
She said, “We are having two lectures on each day for the eight
Ticket Sale Ends Friday
Friday is the absolute deadline for ticket purchases for the SC-Stanford game, according to John Morley, ticket manager.
Morley stressed this point yesterday when he revealed that more than 1200 rooters tickets had been sold already.
Tickets cost $1.50 and can be purchased only at the Service office, 3518 University avenue. The student’s ID card must be presented at time of purchase, he added.
No rooter tickets will be sold at the ticket office 209. Student Union, Morley said. But applications for the $3 reserved seats may be turned in at that office until Oct.
23:
This deadline will be final, he added, because Stanford .must be notified two weeks before the game of the exact number of SC rooters who will be on hand.
Hecklers Boo at UN Ceremony
Skull Fracture Hospitalizes SC Accident Victim
Al P. Maynard Jr., engineering major, was In critical condition in General hospital late yesterday afternoon with a fractured skull and internal injuries .
Early Saturday morning, Maynard, with two roommates. Boyd L. Sharp, 21, and Ruel Cameron, 21, 660 West Jefferson boulevard, stopped to repair a defective headlight and parked the car at the curb.
Cameron said he and Maynard saw a car coming and ran to get out of the way. The car struck Maynard and knocked him 30 feet, then smashed into a service station. Cameron and Sharp, who were asleep in the car. escaped Injury.
Police said Ben J. Bob, 24, 306 fcast 25th street, driver of the other car, was booked on suspicion of auto theft.
Mr. and Mrs. Al Maynard Sr. flew to their son's bedside Saturday afternoon from Phoenix, Ariz. Maynard was still unable to recognize them yesterday.
Troy Special Farm Bound
All-Asia Post
The ASSC Senate will tackle the ticklish NSA question for the third j major departments, therefore peo-time in two weeks when it con- [ ple are welcome venes in special session Wednesday j night. President Al Wiggins an- !
WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 — <V.P> — Harold E. Stassen called on President Truman tonight to make Gen. Douglas MacArthur supreme com-I mander of all American military i interests in the Far East as proof I the administiat:on really wants to ! stop Communism in Asia.
In a radio speech prepared for delivery at 11:30 p.m. EST over the National Broadcasting Company network, the Pennsylvania Univer-s.ty President asserted that if “Mac-Arthur’s advice had been taken after World War II, China would not now be Communist and there would be no American casualty lists in Korea.
Calling the general the “best informed American” on Asian affairs, he sa^d Mr. Truman's Wake Island conference will prove statesmanlike only if the chief executive now accepts MacArthur's advice.
Otherwise, he said, it will have been nothing but a “s:nful political escapade.” and the American people will say: “for shame.”
nounced the meeting yesterday.
With one regular and one special sess^n already tucked away on the issue, the senators will enter the third round faced with three possible decisions.
A vote will decide whether to submit the question of affiliation with the National Students association to the general student body —either next week at the freshman election or in the spring. Then a substitute motion presented by Blue Key President Jack Shaffer will be considered. ShAffer’s motion calls for-a month's waiting period before final disposition of the issue.
If neither of these proposals is adopted, debate may be resumed on a new motion, if one is presented.
By custom, regular Senate meetings are held every two weeks, but Wiggins called one for Wednesday so that "other urgent matters, if any,” might be considered, he said.
to come to more
than one.”
Trethaway, chairman of the Relations committee, said that the classroom approach for the “Learn Your Trojan Songs” campaign has been ruled out.
A record session from Hancock auditorium each noon was suggested as a remedy. Trethaway also suggested that the Knights hold their rallies in the middle of campus so the passers-by could join in.
Drama Element X Slated for KUSC
“Element X,” a suspense drama, j written by Robert Margolis, radio, major, is the title of the program ■ on next week's KUSC Drama Workshop.
Casting will be held Thursday j from 3 to 5 p.m., Radio Rehearsal i building. The program requires i four men and two women charac- | ters.
The show, under the direction of i E. T. Pfund, radio major, will be natlonal financiers recorded next Thursday from 3 to 6 p.m.
LOS ANGELES, Oct. 16 — <UJ?) — Hecklers who styled themselves “individual patriotic Americans” greeted with boos today a ceremony inauguratmg United Nations week in Los Angeles.
Almost 100 persons, principally middle-aged women, kept up a con-^ stant barrage of jeers and whistles as civic and veterans’ group leaders, clergymen and union officials held the ceremony on city hall j steps.
Mayor Fletcher Bowron, Superintendent of Schools A. J. Stod-; dard. the Very Rev. Monsignor Al-den Bell, Rabbi Jacob Kohn, the ! Rev. Dr. William S. Myers, Actors Edward Arnold and Lloyd Nolan and other speakers doggedly de-i livered their addresses.
Only Lt. Col. ^rwin W. Minger. representing the Los Angeles Amer- j ican Legion County Council, took notice of the constant howl. He said the hecklers were “strange creatures who have come to make a travesty of this solemn ceremony.”
After the event's climax when the UN flag was .hoisted, the crowd ! swarmed up the steps to the speak- j ers’ platform, waving American flags and placards.
Among teigns was one which said, "the UN was conceived in the brain • of Alger Hiss.” f
Two men seized the microphone. One said he was the Rev. Charles Murdock, president of the National Constitutional Alliance, and the other Frank Ohlquist, who said the UN flag was the symbol of inter-
Founder s Day Program Is Set for Thursday
Columbia Leads Roll With 22,050; Third Place Held by NYU
SC with its present enroll-1 ment estimated at 20.200 is j the second largest private university in the United : States, John Salmond, assist-! ant registrar, said yesterday.
1 Columbia university with I 22,050 students leads the roll I of approved private institu-! tions. Trailing SC are New l York university with 20,000. Boston • university with 11.200, and the I University of Pittsburgh with 10,-' 067.
SC SECOND
Salmond said SC reached the j second rank position after World j War II with the 1946-47 influx of returning GIs.
Veteran percentage of SC population is still more than half, Salmond said. He approximated 10.500 as the present total veteran enrollment.
Future enrollment ls an enigma. The general immediate trend is a decrease with several forces contributing. The freshmen supply curve plummets downward through 1954 due to the low birth rate of the 30s. The curve starts up again in 1955. and every university in the country is counting on a big enrollment in 1960 as a result of the high birth rate of 1942, according to the department of development. Draft Results Noted Salmond discussing the draft said it was hard to tell exactly what effect it would have upon enrollment with its frequently changing regu-Pullman rat'^s will be $23.73 for iations. Students eligible for the $24.78 for draft have been deferred for this semester, he said, and lie expects a large percentage to obtain a year or make permanent extensions.
Present draftees participating in the Korean war may raise GI enrollment temporarily, Salmond said. The * pre-war registration normal was 7000 but Salmond said he didn't thing SC would return to that low.
Trojans planning to go to the Stanford game in the special allstudent train may make their reservations this week with George Moran, Southern Pacific ticket agent, who will be at the service office. 3518 University avenue.
The special streamliner will have a dance car with a juke box in addition to two dining cars and a i lounge car. Snack bar service will be available.
The “Stanford Special” will leave Los Angeles on Friday evening, November 3 and arrive at Palo Alto next morning. After the game the train will go to San Francisco and { leave there on Sunday morning.
, November 5.
Those who wish to remain at Stanford may do so and will be picked up on the return trip. All coach tickets will cost $16 for the i round trip.
two persons in an upper; two in a lower; $26.15 for one in an upper; and $27.65 for one in a lower.
A group of 20 or more can make arrangements with Moran for an exclusive pullman car.
Thursday is Founder’s day. Observing the anniversary date of the opening of classes on campus in October, 1880. this year’s Founders day program will start with ^ convocation in Bovard auditorium.
Ten o’clock classes will be dismissed to permit students and faculty members to attend the Bovard activities.
Speakers Principal speakers for the program will be Asa V. Call, president of the board of trustees, and Virgil Pinkley, editor and publisher of the Los Angeles Mirror. President Fred D. Fagg Jr. will preside.
Call, president of the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance company, is the second alumnus to head the board of trustees. The late George Fin-
ley Bovard. former president of the university, was the first. Call was graduated from the School of Law in 1914.
UP Vee Pee
Pinkley was graduated from the School of Journalism in 1929. He was vice-president of the United Press association in Los Angeles.
He introduced UP services to such countries as Belgium, Poland, Egypt, and South Africa. Pinkley has traveled more than one-half million miles while covering news stories during his career as a journalist.
Outstanding event of last year’s program was the laying of the cornerstone for the $1 million Found-ders hall, which was completed last spring.
Vets Over Draft Age-Hershey
Motion Picture Ad Exhibit Opens Tonight
orty Students Rally for Support of Proposition C.
Education
Notice
] '’orty SC students, who believe put anti-vivisection legislation will near a fatal blow to medical js earch. carried placards expres-|n g their sent;ments in protest of 1 i - vivisection at a meeting in |o lywo?>d recently.
1CCouncilman Ed Davenport and la|rie Wilson were the principal ters at the Sunday meeting at-In ded by 300 persons.
I lhe students. accompanied bv feral dogs, carried s.gn reading, lti-vnisectionists are saboteurs," id “We are against anti-vivisec-lomsts.”
Dr. Eugene G. Jones, president
of the Animal Well are association, a group of dog owners, dog judges, and trainers, carried a placard which read. “Veterinarians say Yes on C." Proposition C. which appeals on the city ballot Nov. 7, would re-
ly needed to help develop devices for jet plane pilots.”
“Atomic medical research to find cures and treatment for radiation burns has been halted at UCLA, because of these people.” said Dr.
lease uncla.med pound animals for | John P. Meehan, assistant profes
civilian and military medical research.
“Anti-vivisectionists are sabotaging war projects,” declared Sheldon Rosenfeld. a veterinarian on the U. S. Navy medical research project at SC.
“Their activities have made it almost impossible for scientists to obtain animals which are desperate-
sor of physiology at SC, who carried a banner reading, "Twenty-five cities save unwanted pound dogs for research—Why not L.A.?"
Persons connected with the University of South3m California are taking an active part in the campaign for adoption of Proposition C.
Clinton H. Thienes, professor of pharmocology and toxicology, and
safety i Dr. Meehan speak frequently be-j fore women’s and business men’s clubs urging support of. the pro- , posed ordinance.
Other speakers who are addres- ! sing various organizations on the subject are Dr. James DeLamater, j associate dean, School of Medicine, I and Dr. Ijewis T. Bullock, assistant clinical professor ol medicine, and presic^nt of the L.A. Heart association.
The Citizen Committee for Yes on C is headed by Chancellor Rufus j B. von KleinSmid, and its members include many prominent education- i al, civic, and regligious leaders. |
Students who expect to complete the requirements for teaching or administration credentials with university recommendation in February, 1951, should pick up application materials in room 357 Administration at once. Office hours are 9-11:30 Monday through Saturday and 2-4:30 Monday through Friday.
All applications must be completed by Oct. 20 if prompt delivery of the credential is to be made. ,
O. R. Hull, dean School of Education
An exhibit showing 50 years of progress in motion picture advertising starts tonight on the sound stage of the Cinema building. Hoover and West 35th streets.
Delta Kappa Alpha. nat:onal cinema fraternity, is sponsoring the week-long display in cooperation with 20th Century Fox.
“The advertising of today differs from 50 years ago because of a visual language in abstract art. Advertisements of today are aesthetically pleasing,” said William Mehring, lecturer in cirjema.
“Merely a scene from a movie was sufficient publicity years ago, while today, the advertisements are beginning a new era of stressing the mood of the picture,” he said.
“This exhibit has a two fold pur-
Korean Marines Out of Fighting
WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 — U.F) — Vice Adm. Charles T. Joy, commander of Far Eastern naval forces, disclosed today American Marines have been pulled put of action in the Korean figViting but kept silent about their present whereabouts.
pose," said John MaUias, president of Delta Kappa Alpha. "We are trying to encourage a closer relationship between cur cinema department and the industry, itself, and we are attempting to get more students interesed in cinema,” he said.
“When movies first started, advertisements were lusty, carnival stuff borrowed from the circus lot. Often they were more crude than the product they promoted,” said Jess Senn, vice-president of Delta Kappa Alpha.
"Later advertisement consisted of a timid bit of newspaper space sandwiched into crowded newspaper theatrical pages. They seldom carried more than a line or two of text,” Senn said.
“Extremely violent multi-colored posters and billboards in 1916 showed the shrill pitch of motion picture advertising. Advertisements in the 20's consisted of ln*ndsome, expensive volumes of rich paper stock discreetly colored. They were more civilized," he said.
The exhibit will be open from 7 to 9 every week day night until next Tuesday, from 1 to 4 Wednesday and Friday afternoons, and from 12 to 5 on Saturday and 12 to 6 on Sunday.
Do SC veterans run the risk of being drafted?
According to Brig. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of th^ Selective Service system, not many would be in danger if draft boards reclassified them.
“If we keep the present age limit of 19 tc 26, the majority of World War II veterans would not be subject to induction,” .he said in a wire to Veterans Representative Allen A. Arthur.
"Most of them are over 26 and some 50,000 others are passing their 26th birthday anniversary each month.
“It should also be borne in mind,'1 he said, “that a veteran would have the same privileges as a nonveteran insofar as deferment for other reasons is concerned. That is,
| he might be deferred as a man necessary to the national health, safety or interests, as a student, or | for other reasons.”.
Arthur received the Hershey tele-I gram in reply to his queries con-i cerning draft legislation of SC vet-j erans. He wired Rep. Helen Gahagan Douglas and her Republican opponent, Richard Nixon, asking them to state their post-election stands on drafting of veterans.
Official
Notice
The University is celebrating Founders Day on Thursday, October 19. The celebration will take the jform of an all-University convocation at 10 a.m. in Bovard Auditorium. Founders Day ad-l dresses will be delivered by Mr. Asa V. Call and Mr. Virgil Pink-
i ley.
( lasses will be dismissed from 9:50 until 1 lo’clock. AH members of the student body are earnest-I ly invited to join with the administration and the faculty ia observing this important event.
A. S. Raubenheimer

C RANKS AS SECOND LARGEST PRIVATE UNIVERSITY IN U. S.
SSC Forum Speaker Will Urge Alaskan Statehood
tep Vital
0 Safety
1 Nation
Admiral Reeves Says Federal Action Needed For Defense Reasons
call for immediate state-Jod for the territory of laska will be sounded in 133 Junders hall today at 4:15 by Adm. J. W. Reeves U.S. Navy, retired, in a Ilk sponsored by the ASSC Jrum committee.
(There is no longer a ques->n of whether Alaska should
iome a state today or tomorrow,” Imiral Reeves said in an inter-b\v yesterday. “The territory >uld have become a state long
|‘The urgency is greater than ever Russia sits just 45 miles away
—*
PAGE THREE
Goller To Miss Navy Tilt
- PAGE FOUR -
Geologist Visits Bikini
Enrollment
Estimated
At 20.200
Vol. XLII
72
Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Oct. 17, 1950
No. 22
(Courtesy L.A. Times)
J. W. REEVES JR. .
. . . Alaska booster
Im Alaska across the Bering laits,” he continued.
[Any of the arguments put forth It Alaska isn’t ready for state- 1 5d are hogwash.” ll funds for defense installation ! lAdmiral Reeves will point out it Alaska has been a stepchild I the planners in Washington. • C. from borh military and eco-knic standpoints.
statehood would mean more fed-tl funds for defense installtaions such developments as high-1 irs and communications, he said. ! Idmiral Reeves was in charge construction of naval bases in j ska and the Aleutian islands ] ring World War II. Since his liremer.i. he has been general [nager of the Los Angeles De-rtment of Airports.
Other Speakers tarrv Capedo, ASSC forum chair-Jc. said that Reeves is one of prominent, well-qualified speak- | that will be sponsored by the I nun.
ive Hundred xpected for ax Institute
:ax attorneys, accountants, and lc insurance underwriters will Ither at the School of Law to-lorrow for the first meeUng of a kree-day session in the third an-|ial Institute on Federal Taxa-Jn.
f One of the principal speakers in |ie opening program l'- Mark H.
hnson, nationally known author-|y on federal taxation, who will sak on “Dividing an Operating lorporation into Separate Entiles”
Merle. H. Miller, one of the na-|on s leading lax attorneys, will Uk on "Tax Schemes that Failed 1-Where. Wrhen. and Why.” Twenty-four lectures on current ix matters will be given during ie three-day institute
Experimental Theater Opens Run Thursday
A double bill opens the Experimental theater's fifth season at 8:30 p.m. Thursday for a three-day run.
There will be a comedy, “The Man in the Bowler Hat,”- and a tragedy, “Riders of the Sea,” on the group’s first fall program.
Jane Dressier will direct the comedy, an A. A. Milne play.
She has appeared in Pasadena Playhouse and Omaha Community playhouse productions.
Edward Earle plays the male lead ih the farce. Earle not only acts, but writes and conducts musical scores. He starred, wrote and directed the musical score for “Winterset.” He w'rote the musical score of “Antigone,” a last year's Experimental production, and played in it as well.
Barbara Joseph, who plays the female lead, appeared in the Crescent theater production of “Thej Little Foxes.” She played the role ' of Lisa in “Clarissa,” an Experi- i mental theatfcr play, last March.
In the supporting cast are Dee Cooper, Dick Shackleton, Lothor Tuppan, and Dale Wisser.
Freida Callahan directs the other play, John M. Synge's tragedy. The j plot is woven around an Irish family w,ho have lost all but of their men to the sea.
Miss Callahan has appeared in ; summer stock and* on radio shows.
Florence Malin plays the lead.
She has been a comedienne and ' dancer in Navy shows in 1945 and ! has appeared in Pasadena Play- I house productions. She also ap- ! peared in SC's varsity show, “No Love Atoll.”
The supporting cast includes j Elaine Masser, Shirley Ann Powell, 1 dents of the School of Music and Charles Stewart. I )_:____-
Free tickets for the plays may be • . . ^ .
obtained today at the drama office, 1 Al ^ ^ C C I f \ n
3709 South Hoover street, between1 1
9 and 4 p.m. ^ II I A *
Called Again
Stassen Wants I By Wiggins MacArthur for
Bill Kennedy Decides to Vote
No'fornsa To Invade
SC Rooters Prepare
Stanford
(Courtesy L.A. Times) BARBARA BUTTERFIELD . . . solos
Noon Concert Slates Solos
Barbara EuUerfield. soprano, and Gertrude Woods, pianist, will be soloists at the Music at Noon concert Wednesday in Hancock auditorium. Th& program will start at 12:15.
“Rhapsodie Hungrois” No. 6, Liszt, will be Miss Woods' selection, and Miss Butterfield- will sing “Miranda,” Hageman. accompanied by James Low at the piano.
The program will include:
Partita No. 2 in C Minor and Sinfonia. E^h; Six Variations, Op. 24, Beethoven; “Ah. je veux vivre” from "Romeo and Juliet.” Gounod; and "Into the Dark.” Hageman.
Next concert in this weekly series will be presented O^t. 25 and will include original compositions of stu-
Bill Kennedy, LAS president, and member of the Unity party steering committee, will vote against affiliation with the National Students ! Association at the forthcoming Senate meeting. Wednesday night.
Kennedy, representing the largest single body of students at SC, said his decision is a direct result of a vote of the LAS council against i NSA in yesterday’s meeting.
Bill Gumpert, LAS vice-president, moved to stand against NSA. and the council voted 27-21 to uphold the motion.
ln putting the motion on the floor. Gumpert said, “I do not know a lot ahout NSA. but I move that this body go on record as opposed to NSA.” Norm Pakan immediately moved tp table the resolution until the council could “study the problem,” but the motion was ruled out of order.
Cost Is High John Trethaway asked Gumpert why he opposed NSA. and he replied, “the cost is too high for the benefits derived.”
Marie Gordean said, “I think SC can do a lot for NSA. but I do not Uiink NSA can give us enough to compensate for the money.’’ She suggested that the universities on the coast could do more for themselves than NSA could, by just get-i ting together.
Before the vote was taken. Kennedy said. “I am undecided on howto vote on the issue, but this council's vote will be my vote on the Senate.” He said, “I can see many advantages and many disadvan- ! tages.”
Previous to the outburst on NSA, Dori Bonham, former committee j chairman, opened the meeting with ( a report from the committee. She ; outlined the forthcoming "LAS Advisement Week” program for the council. The purpose of the advisement week, November 13-16. is to orientate new and lower division students with their majors.
• i
Two Daily Lectures
She said, “We are having two lectures on each day for the eight
Ticket Sale Ends Friday
Friday is the absolute deadline for ticket purchases for the SC-Stanford game, according to John Morley, ticket manager.
Morley stressed this point yesterday when he revealed that more than 1200 rooters tickets had been sold already.
Tickets cost $1.50 and can be purchased only at the Service office, 3518 University avenue. The student’s ID card must be presented at time of purchase, he added.
No rooter tickets will be sold at the ticket office 209. Student Union, Morley said. But applications for the $3 reserved seats may be turned in at that office until Oct.
23:
This deadline will be final, he added, because Stanford .must be notified two weeks before the game of the exact number of SC rooters who will be on hand.
Hecklers Boo at UN Ceremony
Skull Fracture Hospitalizes SC Accident Victim
Al P. Maynard Jr., engineering major, was In critical condition in General hospital late yesterday afternoon with a fractured skull and internal injuries .
Early Saturday morning, Maynard, with two roommates. Boyd L. Sharp, 21, and Ruel Cameron, 21, 660 West Jefferson boulevard, stopped to repair a defective headlight and parked the car at the curb.
Cameron said he and Maynard saw a car coming and ran to get out of the way. The car struck Maynard and knocked him 30 feet, then smashed into a service station. Cameron and Sharp, who were asleep in the car. escaped Injury.
Police said Ben J. Bob, 24, 306 fcast 25th street, driver of the other car, was booked on suspicion of auto theft.
Mr. and Mrs. Al Maynard Sr. flew to their son's bedside Saturday afternoon from Phoenix, Ariz. Maynard was still unable to recognize them yesterday.
Troy Special Farm Bound
All-Asia Post
The ASSC Senate will tackle the ticklish NSA question for the third j major departments, therefore peo-time in two weeks when it con- [ ple are welcome venes in special session Wednesday j night. President Al Wiggins an- !
WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 — — Harold E. Stassen called on President Truman tonight to make Gen. Douglas MacArthur supreme com-I mander of all American military i interests in the Far East as proof I the administiat:on really wants to ! stop Communism in Asia.
In a radio speech prepared for delivery at 11:30 p.m. EST over the National Broadcasting Company network, the Pennsylvania Univer-s.ty President asserted that if “Mac-Arthur’s advice had been taken after World War II, China would not now be Communist and there would be no American casualty lists in Korea.
Calling the general the “best informed American” on Asian affairs, he sa^d Mr. Truman's Wake Island conference will prove statesmanlike only if the chief executive now accepts MacArthur's advice.
Otherwise, he said, it will have been nothing but a “s:nful political escapade.” and the American people will say: “for shame.”
nounced the meeting yesterday.
With one regular and one special sess^n already tucked away on the issue, the senators will enter the third round faced with three possible decisions.
A vote will decide whether to submit the question of affiliation with the National Students association to the general student body —either next week at the freshman election or in the spring. Then a substitute motion presented by Blue Key President Jack Shaffer will be considered. ShAffer’s motion calls for-a month's waiting period before final disposition of the issue.
If neither of these proposals is adopted, debate may be resumed on a new motion, if one is presented.
By custom, regular Senate meetings are held every two weeks, but Wiggins called one for Wednesday so that "other urgent matters, if any,” might be considered, he said.
to come to more
than one.”
Trethaway, chairman of the Relations committee, said that the classroom approach for the “Learn Your Trojan Songs” campaign has been ruled out.
A record session from Hancock auditorium each noon was suggested as a remedy. Trethaway also suggested that the Knights hold their rallies in the middle of campus so the passers-by could join in.
Drama Element X Slated for KUSC
“Element X,” a suspense drama, j written by Robert Margolis, radio, major, is the title of the program ■ on next week's KUSC Drama Workshop.
Casting will be held Thursday j from 3 to 5 p.m., Radio Rehearsal i building. The program requires i four men and two women charac- | ters.
The show, under the direction of i E. T. Pfund, radio major, will be natlonal financiers recorded next Thursday from 3 to 6 p.m.
LOS ANGELES, Oct. 16 — d recently.
1CCouncilman Ed Davenport and la|rie Wilson were the principal ters at the Sunday meeting at-In ded by 300 persons.
I lhe students. accompanied bv feral dogs, carried s.gn reading, lti-vnisectionists are saboteurs," id “We are against anti-vivisec-lomsts.”
Dr. Eugene G. Jones, president
of the Animal Well are association, a group of dog owners, dog judges, and trainers, carried a placard which read. “Veterinarians say Yes on C." Proposition C. which appeals on the city ballot Nov. 7, would re-
ly needed to help develop devices for jet plane pilots.”
“Atomic medical research to find cures and treatment for radiation burns has been halted at UCLA, because of these people.” said Dr.
lease uncla.med pound animals for | John P. Meehan, assistant profes
civilian and military medical research.
“Anti-vivisectionists are sabotaging war projects,” declared Sheldon Rosenfeld. a veterinarian on the U. S. Navy medical research project at SC.
“Their activities have made it almost impossible for scientists to obtain animals which are desperate-
sor of physiology at SC, who carried a banner reading, "Twenty-five cities save unwanted pound dogs for research—Why not L.A.?"
Persons connected with the University of South3m California are taking an active part in the campaign for adoption of Proposition C.
Clinton H. Thienes, professor of pharmocology and toxicology, and
safety i Dr. Meehan speak frequently be-j fore women’s and business men’s clubs urging support of. the pro- , posed ordinance.
Other speakers who are addres- ! sing various organizations on the subject are Dr. James DeLamater, j associate dean, School of Medicine, I and Dr. Ijewis T. Bullock, assistant clinical professor ol medicine, and presic^nt of the L.A. Heart association.
The Citizen Committee for Yes on C is headed by Chancellor Rufus j B. von KleinSmid, and its members include many prominent education- i al, civic, and regligious leaders. |
Students who expect to complete the requirements for teaching or administration credentials with university recommendation in February, 1951, should pick up application materials in room 357 Administration at once. Office hours are 9-11:30 Monday through Saturday and 2-4:30 Monday through Friday.
All applications must be completed by Oct. 20 if prompt delivery of the credential is to be made. ,
O. R. Hull, dean School of Education
An exhibit showing 50 years of progress in motion picture advertising starts tonight on the sound stage of the Cinema building. Hoover and West 35th streets.
Delta Kappa Alpha. nat:onal cinema fraternity, is sponsoring the week-long display in cooperation with 20th Century Fox.
“The advertising of today differs from 50 years ago because of a visual language in abstract art. Advertisements of today are aesthetically pleasing,” said William Mehring, lecturer in cirjema.
“Merely a scene from a movie was sufficient publicity years ago, while today, the advertisements are beginning a new era of stressing the mood of the picture,” he said.
“This exhibit has a two fold pur-
Korean Marines Out of Fighting
WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 — U.F) — Vice Adm. Charles T. Joy, commander of Far Eastern naval forces, disclosed today American Marines have been pulled put of action in the Korean figViting but kept silent about their present whereabouts.
pose," said John MaUias, president of Delta Kappa Alpha. "We are trying to encourage a closer relationship between cur cinema department and the industry, itself, and we are attempting to get more students interesed in cinema,” he said.
“When movies first started, advertisements were lusty, carnival stuff borrowed from the circus lot. Often they were more crude than the product they promoted,” said Jess Senn, vice-president of Delta Kappa Alpha.
"Later advertisement consisted of a timid bit of newspaper space sandwiched into crowded newspaper theatrical pages. They seldom carried more than a line or two of text,” Senn said.
“Extremely violent multi-colored posters and billboards in 1916 showed the shrill pitch of motion picture advertising. Advertisements in the 20's consisted of ln*ndsome, expensive volumes of rich paper stock discreetly colored. They were more civilized," he said.
The exhibit will be open from 7 to 9 every week day night until next Tuesday, from 1 to 4 Wednesday and Friday afternoons, and from 12 to 5 on Saturday and 12 to 6 on Sunday.
Do SC veterans run the risk of being drafted?
According to Brig. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of th^ Selective Service system, not many would be in danger if draft boards reclassified them.
“If we keep the present age limit of 19 tc 26, the majority of World War II veterans would not be subject to induction,” .he said in a wire to Veterans Representative Allen A. Arthur.
"Most of them are over 26 and some 50,000 others are passing their 26th birthday anniversary each month.
“It should also be borne in mind,'1 he said, “that a veteran would have the same privileges as a nonveteran insofar as deferment for other reasons is concerned. That is,
| he might be deferred as a man necessary to the national health, safety or interests, as a student, or | for other reasons.”.
Arthur received the Hershey tele-I gram in reply to his queries con-i cerning draft legislation of SC vet-j erans. He wired Rep. Helen Gahagan Douglas and her Republican opponent, Richard Nixon, asking them to state their post-election stands on drafting of veterans.
Official
Notice
The University is celebrating Founders Day on Thursday, October 19. The celebration will take the jform of an all-University convocation at 10 a.m. in Bovard Auditorium. Founders Day ad-l dresses will be delivered by Mr. Asa V. Call and Mr. Virgil Pink-
i ley.
( lasses will be dismissed from 9:50 until 1 lo’clock. AH members of the student body are earnest-I ly invited to join with the administration and the faculty ia observing this important event.
A. S. Raubenheimer